I’ve made it no secret here that I don’t enjoy reviewing perfumes because of how subjective this sort of thing is. So, for me to be interested enough to post about Kayali’s Yum Boujee Marshmallow is very telling!
Then, I thought about the additional nine unreviewed Kayali perfumes I tried since my previous ranking…but I still don’t want to review them!

At least not in the traditional sense.
If this is your first time visiting this blog, Welcome! I am fully disclosing that I am not affiliated with this brand. The Kayali and Mona Kattan accounts on social media are very active, so I’ve gotten likes and/or comments on my Kayali related Instagram posts, but that’s the extent of any communication I have with them. All of my Kayali and Huda Beauty products have been purchased by me with my own money and all opinions are my own.
In order to make perfume reviews a bit more fun to write, I try to inject a little more humor (no matter how corny) and try not to worry so much about objectivity while still being thorough.
Kayali Yum Boujee Marshmallow | 81
The key notes for this fragrance are “Strawberry, Pink Marshmallow, [and] Whipped Vanilla.” Anyone who doesn’t like one or more of those notes will not enjoy this perfume because everything else takes a backseat. My first thought when I sprayed this was that it smells like a Strawberry Cheesecake Blizzard, my favorite ice cream from Dairy Queen!
I instantly get the strawberry and sweet creamy vanilla notes. It isn’t until a few hours in that I can actually smell marshmallow. Real marshmallows don’t have a strong scent to begin with, so the fact that it ever registers as something more than just generally sweet is impressive. I understand why it took the brand 81 iterations to nail!
So, in the opening it’s a strawberry candy, light baked vanilla dessert, and ice cream kind of smell. The strawberry only lasts a short time, which is unfortunate because it’s delicious. Hours in, it morphs into more of that marshmallow and toasted coconut kind of smell. For the rest of the day, I’m a walking vanilla milkshake! This fragrance is supposed to have the fruit notes “Pink Lady Apple and Italian Lemon,” as well as floral notes of “Freesia, Nectarine Blossom, and Orange Blossom Water.” However, I can’t detect any of that. Perhaps they’re in the background adding to the overall sweetness, but this scent is purely a gourmand dream on my skin! To me, it’s never heavy or sweet to the point of being sickly. I think that’s the “fluffiness” people keep referring to, with it smelling more like a whipped cream less like a fondant.
This is so close to being my favorite Kayali perfume, but Yum Pistachio remains the queen. That fragrance is so different from anything else I’ve ever owned. The soapy and powdery aspects add a little more complexity. I think people who might normally not like gourmands could be swayed over by Yum Pistachio. However, Yum Marshmallow is for the people who want to smell like they belong on the counter of an upscale bakery. Yum Boujee Marshmallow brings all the boys to the yard!
Regarding the sillage, I need to give myself at least three spritzes in order to continue smelling this on myself all day long, and it stays within my bubble. The only time someone can smell it is if I’m in hugging range. This is unlike my other top 9 Kayali fragrances that have a wider projection area from just 1-2 sprays for several hours before it becomes a skin scent. I prefer having the shorter waft range in exchange for having it last until I’m ready to shower at the end of the night.
My husband is quite sensitive to smells, to the point that he finds Yum Pistachio and other Kayali favorites to be too overpowering in the first 1-2 hours. It’s the “cloud of sweetness” as he refers to them from just one spritz. One time I literally had to put my sweater in another room when I was with his family because I had sprayed it (just once) 45 minutes prior with Yum Pistachio and it was too strong for his family to handle. With Yum Marshmallow though, my husband still finds the three sprays to be strong, but not overwhelming.
The reason this is important is because I’ve seen people online practically bathing in their perfumes, spraying at least six times every few hours. If this perfume requires me to use double or triple the amount I usually do, I’m not sure if it’s going to be strong enough to satisfy heavy perfume wearers. Although my bottle is frosted, I can see that I’ve already used as much of Yum Marshmallow in a week as I’ve used of Eden Sparkling Lychee and Vanilla Candy Rock Sugar over the course of months.
This doesn’t bother me because I can’t ever finish a perfume before it goes bad (which is the whole reason I only buy travel sizes anymore), so I don’t mind the idea of making a repurchase for once if needed. However, I acknowledge that’s not everyone’s situation, so it was important to note here.
Also, I just wanted to add that the only layering I’ve done is pairing both Yum fragrances together. Pistachio with a single spritz still overpowers Marshmallow and is admittedly too potent of a combo for me.
Eden Sparkling Lychee | 39
Prior to Yum Boujee Marshmallow, this was my short-lived second favorite Kayali Fragrance. Dessert-like gourmands are my favorite smells, but then next in line would be fruits. Of the fruity notes, I don’t really pick up anything specific. I can smell tartness (perhaps from the black current and lemon) and candy-like sweetness, which register sensorially as “juiciness.” I’m not sure if it’s that juiciness, tartness, or the actual red apple note that puts this within the Eden scent family, or if it’s all of the above.
Even more than the fruits, is the overpowering sugared violets smell. Thankfully, I love the smell of violets, so I think this is my favorite part of the perfume. The only disappointing bit is that is has lychee in the name, yet I can’t detect it. The rose adds a nice brightness to the perfume. The overall scent makes me think of a Girls’ trip or vacation.
Photo Credit: A Glam Lifestyle
One spray is plenty for me. It can’t be smelled across the room, but it’s enough to smell across a table for at least three hours. It fades a little, to the point that it requires someone to be within a foot of me to detect it for an additional six to seven hours. After that, I can smell it on myself for a few hours more before it’s gone.
Vanilla Candy Rock Sugar | 42
I was a lot more into this fragrance when I first got it, but as I started comparing it to other scents from the brand, it dropped lower for me. I obviously love the sweetness. I can smell the pear, vanilla, and unidentifiable florals (likely ylang ylang and jasmine). There’s a milder violet smell than what is present in Eden Sparkling Lychee. In the beginning hours, instead of rum, this smells a bit like an aging perfume type of alcohol smell. Thankfully, that doesn’t last the whole time. It unfortunately also has patchouli, which on the rare occasion I can tolerate, but in this fragrance I can tell it’s there. Luckily for me, the sugary aspects mostly overshadow it, which is why I continue to give it a chance and wear it on occasion. Essentially, parts of the day I love it because of the fruity-sugary drink vibes, and some parts of the day I wish I wore something different. However, most of the negatives aren’t as much of a factor if I layer it with something else. I try to judge perfumes based on how they work as a standalone product. I will also say that this is something better sprayed onto my clothes instead of my skin because then I don’t have to deal with my body chemistry tainting the patchouli. Times I spray it on my clothes is when I have the best experiences with it.
One of the biggest positives Vanilla Candy Rock Sugar has going for it though is that it’s quite long lasting on me, and it’ll fill a room for several hours before becoming something only I can smell on myself.
Vacay in a Bottle Discovery Set
- Marrakesh in a Bottle Orange Blossom | 24
- Capri in a Bottle Lemon Sugar | 14
- Maui in a Bottle Sweet Banana | 37
- Maldives in a Bottle Ylang Coco | 20
Right off the bat, all of these are personal/skin scents with very little sillage and lasting power on me. I fell in love with Capri Lemon Sugar, but even after three sprays it’s just gone within several hours. It doesn’t matter if it’s on my skin or clothes, this just doesn’t want to last and I’ll never be the person who carries perfume in her purse to do touch ups. The travel size set was too expensive for me, so I was glad when they released them individually, but even more glad the discovery set tester pack was an option. I would have been so disappointed otherwise!
Capri smells just as I would expect from the name. It’s a better lemon sugar for me than Fresh’s Sugar Lemon perfume. The only thing that matters regarding spraying my skin versus clothing is that this smells amazing on my clothes from start to finish, like vanilla–lemon cupcakes. On my skin, it reminds me too much of antiseptic and takes a couple of hours to start smelling better, which is unfortunately a few hours before it ends up disappearing. If this had better longevity, it would have been a winner.
I expected to hate Maui because I’m really not into banana scented things, but it is surprisingly nice! I get a bit more of the coconut cream and vanilla though than banana. It’s lightly sweet and a tiny bit floral, but then disappears into nothing. This is one that only smells good on my clothing. On my skin, it smells way too grown for me. Like…geriatric.
I like the orange smell from Marrakesh, but it disappears quickly. If I reach for a citrus scent, I want to be able to smell it for at least a few hours, not minutes.
I also like the spiced peppery exotic smell from the rest of the notes, but the perfume is overall too floral for me and the smell vanishes the quickest of these four. On my bare skin, it especially takes on a more herbal-green scent from the mix of pink pepper and cedarwood rather than sweet-floral from the Turkish Rose that I can only smell if it’s sprayed on my clothes. So, I prefer this scent on my clothing too, but I’d rather just not wear it at all because it’s not a “me” type of fragrance.
Maldives Ylang Coco was the one I was most concerned by because I feared it would be a repeat experience of Utopia Vanilla Coco (that so many people love and I despise). On my clothes, it’s better than I expected, but I don’t appreciate the herbal nature that it turns into on my skin, and I can only smell fruits (starfruit and lemon) in the beginning. I like the smell of rosemary, but it’s awful on me. Maldives Ylang Coco has a slight sweetness throughout (probably from the coconut milk), but this one just isn’t my kind of perfume.
Something about these vacation fragrances mingling with my body chemistry just…goes wrong. The best of the bunch for me is Capri, which is miles above the others.
Wedding Velvet Santal | 35 and Wedding Silk Santal | 36
Kayali Velvet Santal is quite the departure from the primarily feminine fragrances. I sometimes enjoy a unisex or masculine fragrance, like Replica’s Jazz Club. However, this one is just not for me. It has some pleasant notes like jasmine and white musk, but it’s strongly leathery, which I assume is from the benzoin. I don’t mind leather, but it’s a bit much. I can also smell the woody notes, but the website described it as a “creamy sandalwood” with warm cedarwood. I was expecting it to make me think of taking a pleasant walk through a forest…not stumbling through a lumbar yard.
Photo Credit: Nabilak and Conner Industries
I wouldn’t call this bad, but it’s just really not my style. I’m glad I only bought the trial vial, but based on the notes, chances were low that I’d like it anyway. I figured I could give it to my husband (then-boyfriend), but he’s not into it either.
The photo above is the best interpretation I could find of the feeling Velvet Santal envokes. It’s not light enough to be what I consider a “clean” fragrance, but there’s something smooth and streamlined about it. It’s simplistic. It smells like an object. It’s like I spent too much time in someone’s woodworking and leather-working studio (the cleanest one in existence), and the smells from there naturally rubbed onto me, not due to a perfume. There’s not much projection and not much longevity either.
Moving along…
According to reviewers I saw prior to the launch, they called Silk Santal a mixture of Vanilla 28 and Deja Vu. I wanted to love 28, but the patchouli ruined it, and I liked Deja Vu, but not enough to want a travel size. So, the fact that this doesn’t have patchouli and Silk Santal is like a combination of the other perfumes I wanted, I was sold! I took the chance on the 10ml bottle.
On the bright side, this smells alright, but I certainly wanted more out of it. It has a tame sweetness mixed with florals. It’s an unoffending vanilla-floral, which feels “safe” and a bit boring. It’s more of a skin scent for me, but it lasts between six and eight hours. I can’t recall if I just didn’t bring it with me or if I actually gave it away. It’s good enough that I don’t mind owning it, but how could I ever reach for it when I have the Yum ones in my collection that make me way more excited to put it on and bring me much more joy?
Mona and her husband mentioned that these fragrances represented them, which is why it’s totally fine that it’s not really for me or my mister! Silk Santal is more of a spring-summer kind of scent, which is quite far from the vibes of the chilly winter wedding I had!
I can’t remember what I wore on my wedding day, but my best guess is a combination of Yum Pistachio Gelato and Lovefest Burning Cherry because that’s my favorite. The only other possibility is Invite Only, because my husband was more into that one at the time and I don’t know if I picked that to be safer. It’s actually possible that I wore Invite Only on the second day instead when we took additional photos at a different location.
Elixir | 11
I waited so long to try and get a mini or travel size of this in the US, but it had been out of stock for well over a year. When I moved to Germany, I was excited to see it was actually available! Neither the US nor Deutschland had the trial samples in stock, but I was too curious not to take a chance. So, I got the 10ml travel size!
I don’t know if this will be discontinued, so I’ll list all the notes from the website: Red Apple, Rose de Mai Absolute, Jasmine Sambac Absolute, Patchouli, Vanilla, and according to the website images, there is also musk.
I never thought of myself as a rose fan, but however the perfumers concocted or extracted it is just wonderful! Apparently Rose de Mai is supposed to be quite special in itself.
The combination of the apple with the rose and jasmine somehow registers to my brain as citrus-like, which I love (some people say they smell grape instead)! Perhaps what I’m actually smelling is a certain kind of patchouli that when balanced with the rose is having that effect. It is easier to say I hate patchouli because 90% of the time it ruins a fragrance for me. I’m a perfume novice, so I don’t know a lot of specifics, but apparently there are many things that effect how patchouli will smell and most especially what it’s paired with. I think nearly all are bad on my body, but the ones that work were formulated a different way or the combination of other things changes it enough that I won’t mind it.
Musk can be an iffy note for me too, but the musks from Kayali are great. So, the combination of everything in Elixir just works for me (at least in the beginning). It’s got a depth/richness to it. It’s sexy and dark. The florals keep it from leaning too masculine and too heavy. If you’re more interested in the apple though, just know that it creates a synergy with the other notes and doesn’t stand out as distinctly apple on its own. To help the apple stand out or to smell fruitier overall, I would suggest pairing it with Juicy Apple.
One spritz keeps Elixir within a more intimate cloud around me. Unfortunately for me, after an hour, most of the sweetness disappears and I’m left with more of the musky-earthy kind of smell. I’m grateful for the vanilla to help it along. At this point it’s still not bad, but it’s a lot less intoxicating than how it starts.
By two hours, I can only smell this if my nose is pressed up right to my skin. This perfume is supposed to be incredibly long lasting, but only the patchouli lasts all day. Four hours in, every other note is undetectable.
The photo below shows how much of my perfumes were used prior to starting this review. I like Elixir, but I almost never use it! However, I think with this scent profile combination, it was intended to be layered with other fragrances. For example, there’s vanilla in here, but it’s not as pronounced of a note as it is in other Kayali fragrances. I assume it’s there to help branch Elixir with other Kayali perfumes together without being overpowering. So, I expect to have a much bigger dent in it this year.
Previous Kayali Review and Ranking…
- Yum Pistachio Gelato – S tier
- Lovefest Burning Cherry – A tier
- Invite Only Amber – A tier
- Vanilla Royale Sugared Patchouli – A tier
- Sweet Diamond Pink Pepper – B tier
- Eden Juicy Apple – B tier
- Musk 12 – B tier
- Deja Vu White Flower – B tier
- Vanilla 28 – C tier
- Utopia Vanilla Coco – D tier
NEW 2024 KAYALI RANKING
- Yum Pistachio Gelato – S tier
- Yum Boujee Marshmallow –S tier
- Lovefest Burning Cherry – S tier
- Eden Sparkling Lychee –A tier
- Invite Only Amber – A tier
- Vanilla Royale Sugared Patchouli – A tier
- Sweet Diamond Pink Pepper – A tier
- Elixir – B tier
- Capri in A Bottle Lemon Sugar –B tier
- Eden Juicy Apple – B tier
- Musk 12 – B tier
- Deja Vu White Flower – B tier
- Vanilla Candy Rock Sugar – B tier
- Maui in A Bottle Sweet Banana –B tier
- Wedding Silk Santal – C tier
- Vanilla 28 – C tier
- Marrakesh in a Bottle Orange Blossom – C tier
- Wedding Velvet Santal – C tier
- Maldives in a Bottle Ylang Coco – C tier
- Utopia Vanilla Coco – D tier
S tier essentially means that I would repurchase it if I ran out and might even consider buying a larger size bottle if my fragrance collection was smaller.
A tier is for the perfumes that I like enough to be happy if I was gifted a bottle, but not enough to repurchase myself (purely because I would want to use up the S tier ones instead).
B tier has the scents I like when I’m in a particular mood. They aren’t scent profiles I wear that often, but I will still enjoy them while I have them.
C tier falls into two groups: the perfumes that are nice yet boring or the perfumes that don’t contain enough good notes to outweigh the ones that either do nothing for me or I even dislike.
D tier is for the perfumes that I really don’t like. It might start off nice but dries down to something I despise. It’s more common for me to come across a D tier fragrance as a free gift with purchase sample that I didn’t choose. Usually, if the notes are to my liking, the worst it ends up at is C tier. Utopia Vanilla Coco is the rare unexpected disappointment.
F tier is for the perfumes that I find to be vile. It would be something I’d have to immediately wash off my skin or to change my clothes. Since I always look at notes before I buy I perfume, it’s likely I expected an F tier fragrance to work for me, but it somehow didn’t. In this case, chances are high that it just didn’t mix well with my body chemistry and is unlikely to be universally disliked by everyone. A perfume rarely gets into F tier for me, but an example is every Juicy Couture fragrance. I tried at least five and they always smelled amazing on my friend, but terrible on me.
Over time, my preferences have slightly changed. My perfumes have had time to mature. Seasons change. New memories and scent associations have occurred. So, it’s only natural that the order of my Kayali perfume favorites shifted a bit.
On a final note, I just wanted to share that for the Huda Cyber Craze event this year, I bought a notebook and the fragrance case that is supposed to hold three 100 ml bottles. It’s listed as rose gold, but to me it’s more like a rosy bronze. It makes for a very secure makeup bag with the two dividers inside. Naturally, it’s way bigger than the Yum Pistachio Gelato Fragrance case that I’m using a bit more as intended by holding all my trial and travel size perfumes. I just wanted to share pictures and comparisons in case anyone has been interested in getting those from the website. I tend to like Huda’s non-makeup merch too.
That’s all for today! Thanks for reading!
-Lili ❤

































